Department of Animal Ecology, Evolutionary Biology Centre, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
PLoS Biol. 2010 Mar 16;8(3):e1000335. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.1000335.
When selective pressures differ between males and females, the genes experiencing these conflicting evolutionary forces are said to be sexually antagonistic. Although the phenotypic effect of these genes has been documented in both wild and laboratory populations, their identity, number, and location remains unknown. Here, by combining data on sex-specific fitness and genome-wide transcript abundance in a quantitative genetic framework, we identified a group of candidate genes experiencing sexually antagonistic selection in the adult, which correspond to 8% of Drosophila melanogaster genes. As predicted, the X chromosome is enriched for these genes, but surprisingly they represent only a small proportion of the total number of sex-biased transcripts, indicating that the latter is a poor predictor of sexual antagonism. Furthermore, the majority of genes whose expression profiles showed a significant relationship with either male or female adult fitness are also sexually antagonistic. These results provide a first insight into the genetic basis of intralocus sexual conflict and indicate that genetic variation for fitness is dominated and maintained by sexual antagonism, potentially neutralizing any indirect genetic benefits of sexual selection.
当雄性和雌性之间存在选择压力时,那些经历这些相互冲突的进化力量的基因被称为性拮抗基因。尽管这些基因的表型效应在野生和实验室种群中都有记录,但它们的身份、数量和位置仍然未知。在这里,我们通过在定量遗传框架中结合关于性别特异性适应性和全基因组转录丰度的数据,鉴定了一组在成年个体中经历性拮抗选择的候选基因,这些基因占黑腹果蝇基因的 8%。正如预测的那样,X 染色体富含这些基因,但令人惊讶的是,它们只占总性别偏倚转录本的一小部分,这表明后者是性拮抗的一个很差的预测因子。此外,表达谱与雄性或雌性成年适应性显著相关的大多数基因也是性拮抗的。这些结果首次深入了解了基因座内性冲突的遗传基础,并表明适应性的遗传变异主要由性拮抗所主导和维持,这可能抵消了性选择的任何间接遗传益处。